Collected Editions
- Queen & Country:
- Operation: Broken Ground (collects Queen & Country #1-4 and Oni Press Color Special 2001 #1, 120 pages, April 2002, ISBN 1-929998-21-X)
- Operation: Morning Star (collects Queen & Country #5-7, 88 pages, October 2002, ISBN 1-929998-35-X)
- Operation: Crystal Ball (collects Queen & Country #8-12, 152 pages, January 2003, ISBN 1-929998-49-X)
- Operation: Blackwall (collects Queen & Country #13-15, 88 pages, November 2003, ISBN 1-929998-68-6)
- Operation: Stormfront (collects Queen & Country #16-20, 168 pages, April 2004, ISBN 1-929998-84-8)
- Operation: Dandelion (collects Queen & Country #21-24, 128 pages, August 2004, ISBN 1-929998-97-X)
- Operation: Saddlebag (collects Queen & Country #25-28, 144 pages, May 2005, ISBN 1-932664-14-9)
- Operation: Red Panda (collects Queen & Country #29-32, 144 pages, June 2007, ISBN 1-932664-65-3)
- Queen & Country The Definitive Edition:
- Volume 1 (collects Queen & Country #1-12 and Oni Press Color Special 2001 #1, 376 pages, November 2007, ISBN 1-932664-87-4)
- Volume 2 (collects Queen & Country #13-24, 320 pages, April 2008, ISBN 1-932664-89-0)
- Volume 3 (collects Queen & Country #25-32, Scriptbook #1, 394 pages, July 2008, ISBN 1-932664-96-3)
- Volume 4 (collects Queen & Country: Declassified Volumes 1-3, 320 pages, April 2009, ISBN 1-934964-13-1)
- Queen & Country: Declassified:
- Volume 1 (88 pages August 2003, ISBN 1-929998-58-9)
- Volume 2 (96 pages May 2006, ISBN 1-932664-28-9)
- Volume 3 (96 pages May 2006, ISBN 1-932664-35-1)
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Famous quotes containing the words collected and/or editions:
“The mob has many heads but no brains.”
—17th-century English proverb, collected in Thomas Fuller, Gnomologia (1732)
“The next Augustan age will dawn on the other side of the Atlantic. There will, perhaps, be a Thucydides at Boston, a Xenophon at New York, and, in time, a Virgil at Mexico, and a Newton at Peru. At last, some curious traveller from Lima will visit England and give a description of the ruins of St Pauls, like the editions of Balbec and Palmyra.”
—Horace Walpole (17171797)